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Identity theft protection company LifeLock exposed the email addresses of up to 55 million users through a flaw on its website Login/Join 
The Unmanned Writer
Picture of LS1 GTO
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by smschulz:
quote:
Originally posted by radioman:
I never really trusted them. Something about the background of their founder bothered me.


Your link is a massive click-bait site. Mad


Not for me.






Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.



"If dogs don't go to Heaven, I want to go where they go" Will Rogers

The definition of the words we used, carry a meaning of their own...



 
Posts: 14257 | Location: It was Lat: 33.xxxx Lon: 44.xxxx now it's CA :( | Registered: March 22, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Member
Picture of Sig Sauer Kraut
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by sns3guppy:
A couple of years ago the database for the clearinghouse for security clearances got hacked...which is to say that the personal data for tens of millions of personnel who hold or have held security clearances...was taken. That data is far, far more comprehensive than any other database, and extends far beyond our own lives.

That database has quite literally every detail about the individual, as well as his or her family, friends, neighbors, former landlords, you name it. Not only was my information taken, but numerous other people that I know directly or peripherally were contacted to say the breach had occurred, and offered a year of monitoring. Ironically, while my data was taken, it seems I was the only one on my list NOT contacted with the warning.
Interrsting. Neither I nor anyone I know got contacted (as far as those people told me). I wonder if my last clearance was old enough to have not been in that database.
 
Posts: 691 | Registered: January 04, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Do No Harm,
Do Know Harm
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by LS1 GTO:
quote:
Originally posted by chongosuerte:
quote:
Originally posted by 220-9er:
Why would anyone waste money on that crap?
Just do a credit freeze.
Costs little to nothing and works.


+1

This is my approach. Any reason it could fail?


It costs nothing per the article in radioman's post above (a good, but long, read). The article points out though:

quote:
Customers pay LifeLock $10 a month to call a credit bureau every three months and put a fraud alert on an account. By law, if one bureau is notified, it must alert the other two.


So in essence, you're paying them $120/yr to do something four times ($30 per effort) which you could do on your own - if you are disciplined enough to remember.


My credit has been locked with the 3 bureaus for a couple of years. For free. For something as insignificant as increasing an existing credit line, I have to call and provide a code to have the particular freeze lifted for a period of time I define. When I do this I receive notification through snail mail that my freeze was lifted.

What would this approach not protect me from?




Knowing what one is talking about is widely admired but not strictly required here.

Although sometimes distracting, there is often a certain entertainment value to this easy standard.
-JALLEN

"All I need is a WAR ON DRUGS reference and I got myself a police thread BINGO." -jljones
 
Posts: 11472 | Location: NC | Registered: August 16, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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